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Lucius K. Caldwell

Researcher at University of Idaho

Publications -  10
Citations -  71

Lucius K. Caldwell is an academic researcher from University of Idaho. The author has contributed to research in topics: Broodstock & Indigenous rights. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 10 publications receiving 53 citations.

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Plasma nesfatin-1 is not affected by long-term food restriction and does not predict rematuration among iteroparous female rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).

TL;DR: The results from these experiments do not provide support for plasma nesfatin-1 as a signal for the initiation of reproductive development in rematuring female rainbow trout.
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Metabolic endocrine factors involved in spawning recovery and rematuration of iteroparous female rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).

TL;DR: Results show that this feed restriction regime arrested reproductive development and affected factors associated with energy balance purported to play a role in initiating reproductive development within 2-4months after spawning.
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Reproductive development in captive reconditioned female steelhead kelts: evidence for consecutive and skip spawning life histories

TL;DR: Reconditioning of post-spawned anadromous rainbow trout (steelhead kelts, Oncorhynchus mykiss) is being implemented as a recovery tool on the Yakima River in the mid-Columbia River Basin by measuring plasma E2 and VG levels, which showed that fish separated into rematuring and nonrematuring cohorts by October.
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Balancing competing life‐stage requirements in salmon habitat rehabilitation: between a rock and a hard place

TL;DR: A parent‐offspring conflict in optimal spawning gravel size for Chinook salmon is indicated, and it is suggested that an intermediate gravel size would maximize overall reproductive success across both spawning and incubation life stages.
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Abiotic factors influence surface water herbicide concentrations following silvicultural aerial application in Oregon's north coast range

TL;DR: Investigating factors that influence silvicultural herbicide concentrations in surface water and identifying any potential risks indicates that proximity to the treatment site, time from application, and rainfall influence herbicide presence and concentrations insurface water.